The last few days have been very nice. The night we got back from Galilee (Thursday) we went out to dinner as a group and treated our teachers to a meal. It was great time, sitting and talking and laughing together. The next afternoon was the final test. I'm only auditing the course so I didn't have to take it but most of my classmates spent the morning furiously studying. I spent the morning blogging and doing laundry. After the test we had a class meeting where certificates of completion were given out. Even I got one although I don't feel I've really earned it after watching everyone else study and stress. That night at dinner you could feel a collective sigh of relief. People were able to sit around after dinner and talk and enjoy themselves without feeling the need to rush off to study. Our class meeting that afternoon had also been to prepare us for going home and you could feel the atmosphere change in that way as well as people began to set their faces towards home in a sense; whether eagerly or grudgingly. Yesterday was a free day. I spent the morning with some friends shopping in the old city. We came back for lunch and I spent the afternoon just reading a novel and napping; things I really haven't done since I got here.
From there we headed up the street to St. Georges, an Anglican church, were we attended the English service. I have never been to an Anglican church before so I wasn't really sure what to expect but I found that I really liked it! It is very liturgical, meaning it follows a very set form. Certain things are said and done at certain times (always in the same order) and there are several places where the congregation is expected to respond with a phrase or bit of liturgy (like the Nicene Creed for example). I did not really expect to enjoy it very much to be honest as I am not really a fan of this kind of worship. I think it's because the little experience I have with liturgical services, it always seems as though they are doing it for the sake of the ritual itself, as if performing these rituals will somehow make them holier, and the meaning behind the ritual has been lost. But that was not the case this morning! Part of it may be that it being in English helped. The liturgy that was being recited to us, and that we were in turn reciting, was rich with deep truths of the faith and the spirit of the service seem much more a celebration of those truths than that of fulfilling a duty. The portion of the Gospel that was read was Luke 10 (the first part of the chapter). Verse 2 is the verse that says, "Then He said to them, 'The harvest truly is great, but the laborers are few; therefore pray the Lord of the harvest to send out laborers into His harvest.'" I had never put together before that this remark was made in the context of Jesus sending out 70 of his disciples in twos to preach the coming of the Kingdom of God. In the message the preacher/pastor/priest (I'm not really sure what they are called in the Anglican church) pointed out that Jesus sent them out in groups of two and that this great task of taking the gospel to the nations is not meant to be a one man show, so to speak. He also talked about the joy there is in serving the Lord and spreading his Word. The scripture and the message really spoke to me partly because it is something the Lord had been pressing on my heart in the last few weeks. I took communion with them and left feeling excited and blessed beyond measure. I feel as though "my cup has been overflowing" all day long!
Tomorrow is our last day and we have a lot planned! We are going to the Rockefeller Museum and St. Ann's Cathedral where they are going to let us use one of their rooms to hold a small service to close out our time together. We'll get falafel for lunch up by the Damascus Gate and may come back to the school down the Via Dolorosa. We'll have just a little time to finish packing 9maybe even get a quick shower) before catching our bus to the airport to head home. So then I'll see most of you soon! I can't wait to tell you more face to face! You have no idea how much I've been holding back just because there is never enough time to write out everything.
God Bless and Happy Independence Day (again)!